For the fifth time since 1999
when the fourth Republic began, Nigerians last Saturday went to the poll to
elect a president who will lead the nation for the next four years.
The announcement of the
presidential election result by the chairman of the Independent National
Electoral Commission, Mahmood Yakubu, was almost halted by the protests of the
leading opposition party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). It accused the
umpire of bias and complained of irregularities in the results announced by the
electoral commission. The PDP presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar, has
rejected the result and said he would challenge it in court.
Mr Buhari came to power in 2015
on the tide of popular discontent against his predecessor, Goodluck Jonathan.
However, the tide started ebbing a few months into his administration, starting
with his delay in appointing ministers.
For a man regarded as a firm and
fearless leader with disdain for corruption, his close association with people
accused of fraud and his frequent trips abroad in search of medical care soon
impaired his goodwill.
A series of policy mishaps,
delayed or failed responses to key national issues, economic troubles leading
to massive loss of jobs, increased insecurity, among others, forced many
Nigerians to seek alternative, believing that the jinx broken by Mr Buhari when
he unseated a sitting president in 2015 can be repeated in 2019. They wanted to
serve Mr Buhari a dose of his own medicine.
Based on the results announced by
INEC, Mr Buhari has survived and has again been handed a four-year term — that
is if not upturned by the court where his opponent has vowed to seek redress.
How then did a man many see as
slow, aged and unfit to rule, triumph? This is especially taking into consideration
the wide margin of about 4 million votes he won with this year, as against the
2.5 million votes he secured ahead of the incumbent in 2015.
Without prejudice to allegations
of electoral manipulation that will be decided by the Supreme Court if Mr Abubakar
makes true his threat, here are some factors that helped Mr Buhari to victory.
Loyal support base
Since 2003 when Mr Buhari began
his quest for the presidency, there are states in the North East and the North
West he has never lost, whether running in the defunct All Nigeria Peoples
Party (ANPP), Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) or even in his new APC. The
states are Kano, Katsina, Sokoto, Yobe, Borno, Gombe, Bauchi, among others.
While many attributed this
support to Mr Buhari’s lifestyle compared to other politicians and his religion
of Islam, the fact that he had contested against fellow Muslims from the same
northern region and still beat them appears to defeat this claim.
Since the death of the former
premier of the defunct northern region, Ahmadu Bello, Mr Buhari is the only
leader from Northern Nigeria who has managed to build a cultic following that
is largely unconcerned about his performance in office. The real motivation for
this support remains unclear.
The opposition PDP also made
inroads into some of these northern states, and particularly Kano, where a
former governor of the state, Rabiu Kwankwaso, led the battle for the PDP. But
the party’s efforts yielded little compared to Mr Buhari’s APC’s.
Mr Buhari won in Kano despite his
association with Governor Abdullahi Ganduje who was filmed accepting dollars
alleged to be a bribe from a state contractor. The APC candidate scored more
than 1.4 million votes compared to the paltry 391,593 garnered by his rival.
Power of incumbency
Until 2015 when former President
Jonathan left office, upstaging incumbents in Nigeria, and most nations across
Africa had been a strange sight. Thus the commendation that greeted Mr
Jonathan’s historic phone call to his opponent, even before the final collation
of results in 2015, was not unexpected.
Apart from the common sit-tight
syndrome afflicting African leaders, except a very few including the late
Nelson Mandela of South Africa, an African leader, whether in a democratic or
autocratic system, is usually dominant. The power transcends their ability to
muscle opposition at home, but also to curry the favour of many international
organisations whose business interests and other deals require state
protection.
As the world’s most populous
black nation, the president of Nigeria is powerful and commands great respect
from far and near, even if the citizens feel otherwise. Also, in the case of Mr
Buhari, apart from his mass appeal to a section of the country, his assumption
of power in 2015 has attracted him more friends across the bridge down south.
Prior to his emergence in 2015, selling his candidacy to the southern
electorate was a herculean task.
But in 2019, with political
appointments offered many Nigerians across the states of the federation, and
political patronage enjoyed by many politicians and businessmen and women, the
story changed significantly for Mr. Buhari. This is evident in the results of
the election across the states. For the first time in the history of his electoral
journeys, Mr Buhari, apart from simple majority also secured the
constitutionally required 25 per cent of total votes cast in 34 states of the
federation.
Buhari’s relationship with
governors
This was a significant strength
of Mr Buhari’s campaign in the southeast region, where the president faced
stiff opposition. The president, since his assumption of power, has related
cordially with all governors regardless of political party or ethnic
affiliations. When bailouts were dished out to the states to assist them on
salary payments, the sharing formula was generally accepted as fair and just.
The Enugu State governor and his
counterparts in Ebonyi and Abia, who are of the PDP, had no reason to be
committed to plots against the president. When their party queried their
commendation of the president, one of them was reported to have said his
relationship with the president was beyond politics.
The Anambra State Governor,
Willie Obiano, whose predecessor was the running mate of the PDP candidate, did
not also hide his admiration for Mr Buhari. He said he had taken more
infrastructural projects to the region than many of his predecessors.
Political realignment
Defections and political
realignments across the country helped Mr Buhari’s reelection bid in no small
measure. The endorsement of some key figures seemed to have enhanced his
chances.
For instance, Godswill Akpabio
may have lost his senatorial reelection bid in Akwa Ibom State, but his
defection to APC emboldened the president’s camp and reduced the strength of
the PDP. While he failed to win the state for the APC, the president’s
performance in the state cannot be dissociated from his efforts alongside other
leaders in the party.
A similar scenario played out in
Rivers State, which is generally regarded as the hotbed of intriguing politics.
The combination of the strength of former Governor Rotimi Amaechi, Magnus Abe,
among others, gave a stiff challenge to the PDP in the state. Even when Mr
Amaechi was the state governor in 2015, the president could not record more
than 69,000 votes, compared to the PDP’s more than 1 million votes recorded.
But the story changed this year.
The emergence of a former
governor of Abia State who is facing corruption charges, Orji Kalu, as a
senator-elect on the platform of the APC, is a confirmation of the influence of
the power of realignments on the fortune of Mr Buhari in the east.
PDP/Atiku’s alleged baggage of
corruption
If Mr Buhari was unable to
achieve anything in the last four years, he was able to demonise the main
opposition party as a haven of corruption. Anywhere the president or his party
members went, they were quick to label the PDP as a gathering of corrupt
individuals.
They usually backed up their
claims with accounts of how the nation’s economy plummeted under the weight of
financial malfeasance during the 16 years of the party’s reign. Not even the
argument that the APC has been turned to a sanctuary for those it tagged as
corrupt could stop the ruling party from tarring its opponent black.
The public apology by the party
through its national chairman, Uche Secondus, may have worsened the situation,
as it was seen by many as an admission of guilt.
The choice of Atiku Abubakar as
its presidential candidate did not also help matters, especially with the
baggage of yet unproven corruption allegations placed on Mr. Abubakar’s head.
Efforts to clear his name and his
hurried visit to America ahead of the election could hardly change the minds of
many Nigerians about the PDP candidate. Even when many Nigerians did not want
Mr Buhari’s return as president, Mr Abubakar was not the alternative for them.
A leader of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) at the University
of Lagos (UNILAG), Akoka, said rather than voting for either, he would stay
away.
The ASUU leader, who asked not to
be named, described the choice before Nigerians as Hobbesian, saying there was
only one offer, and it was either Nigerians took it, or they would lose it.
PDP’s protracted crisis
Another major factor that may
have influenced the reelection of Mr Buhari was the prolonged crisis within the
opposition PDP. Until 2018, the crisis of leadership that rocked the party led
to the exodus of its members to other parties. The ruling APC was a beneficiary
in many states. The likes of former Borno State Governor, Ali Sheriff, and his
supporters; its former spokesman, Dayo Adeyeye in Ekiti State; Iyiola Omisore,
a former senator in Osun State; Jerry Gana, former presidential aspirant, and
the party’s chairman in Lagos State, Moshood Salvador, among others, left the
party.
The fallout of the party’s
presidential primaries also affected the party as the choice of the delegates
raised dust. The selection of Peter Obi, regarded as a new entrant into the
party from his former All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), also fueled
further crisis. Even when the party stakeholders publicly denied any rancour
over Mr. Obi’s choice, keen watchers knew all was not well. That may have
contributed significantly to the improved figures recorded by Mr Buhari in Mr
Obi’s region.
Election postponement
The last-minute postponement of
the general election was one of the major factors that affected voters’ turnout
last Saturday. There are indications that Mr Buhari was a major beneficiary.
Many Nigerians, and particularly those who travelled far distances before the
postponement, could not make it back to their polling centres a week after.
APC’s firm leadership
The renewed energy brought on
board by the new leadership of the APC under Adams Oshiomhole, a former
governor, also helped the party.
Even though his leadership was
accused of meddlesomeness and corruption by some stakeholders, his ability to
maintain party supremacy seemed to have instilled discipline in the party.
People may query the fallout of the party primaries in states such as Rivers,
Zamfara, Imo, and Ogun, but the outcome of the elections in many of these
states proved the party leader right.
Before Mr. Oshiomhole’s
emergence, the leadership seemed to have lost grip on the party structures
across many states. The conflict between the executive and the Legislature was
not unconnected with the poor leadership of the ruling party.
Politics of endorsement
Endorsements like those from the
regional and socio-cultural groups such as Afenifere, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, among
others, seemed to have caused more divisions than unity. Many accused the
groups of receiving pecuniary gains for their decisions, and as a result,
decided to vote against their wishes.
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This writer is very biased and unprofessional, how can he mention all these factors without including the militarisation of the South as a contributing factor to PMB victory.
ReplyDeleteThe final and most critical factor was conspicuously left out, "RIGGING". When an incumbent rigs, he has the portfolio of the nation at his disposal. With the alignment of most of the factors listed above, he/she can be successful at rigging. However, in the absence of some of the above mentioned factors, financial inducement to rig can fail.
ReplyDeleteNo militarisation in the south. The military at check points and not at polling units are to checkmate the rigging movements and violence at known spots of trouble. Look at the incidents at some areas in Rivers State, Lagos and Plateau.
ReplyDeleteHon. Ibrahim Mantu confessed to the whole world that PDP had never won any election in Nigeria without rigging. @ anonymous 8:41am should therefore understand and analyse the situation better.
ReplyDeleteWuruwuru factor
ReplyDelete